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An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws

Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion years ago. As gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates) evolved, teeth developed on oral jaws and helped to establish the dominance of this lineage on land and in the sea. The advent of oral jaws was facilita...

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Autores principales: Fraser, Gareth J, Hulsey, C. Darrin, Bloomquist, Ryan F, Uyesugi, Kristine, Manley, Nancy R, Streelman, J. Todd
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2637924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19215146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000031
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author Fraser, Gareth J
Hulsey, C. Darrin
Bloomquist, Ryan F
Uyesugi, Kristine
Manley, Nancy R
Streelman, J. Todd
author_facet Fraser, Gareth J
Hulsey, C. Darrin
Bloomquist, Ryan F
Uyesugi, Kristine
Manley, Nancy R
Streelman, J. Todd
author_sort Fraser, Gareth J
collection PubMed
description Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion years ago. As gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates) evolved, teeth developed on oral jaws and helped to establish the dominance of this lineage on land and in the sea. The advent of oral jaws was facilitated, in part, by absence of hox gene expression in the first, most anterior, pharyngeal arch. Much later in evolutionary time, teleost fishes evolved a novel toothed jaw in the pharynx, the location of the first vertebrate teeth. To examine the evolutionary modularity of dentitions, we asked whether oral and pharyngeal teeth develop using common or independent gene regulatory pathways. First, we showed that tooth number is correlated on oral and pharyngeal jaws across species of cichlid fishes from Lake Malawi (East Africa), suggestive of common regulatory mechanisms for tooth initiation. Surprisingly, we found that cichlid pharyngeal dentitions develop in a region of dense hox gene expression. Thus, regulation of tooth number is conserved, despite distinct developmental environments of oral and pharyngeal jaws; pharyngeal jaws occupy hox-positive, endodermal sites, and oral jaws develop in hox-negative regions with ectodermal cell contributions. Next, we studied the expression of a dental gene network for tooth initiation, most genes of which are similarly deployed across the two disparate jaw sites. This collection of genes includes members of the ectodysplasin pathway, eda and edar, expressed identically during the patterning of oral and pharyngeal teeth. Taken together, these data suggest that pharyngeal teeth of jawless vertebrates utilized an ancient gene network before the origin of oral jaws, oral teeth, and ectodermal appendages. The first vertebrate dentition likely appeared in a hox-positive, endodermal environment and expressed a genetic program including ectodysplasin pathway genes. This ancient regulatory circuit was co-opted and modified for teeth in oral jaws of the first jawed vertebrate, and subsequently deployed as jaws enveloped teeth on novel pharyngeal jaws. Our data highlight an amazing modularity of jaws and teeth as they coevolved during the history of vertebrates. We exploit this diversity to infer a core dental gene network, common to the first tooth and all of its descendants.
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spelling pubmed-26379242009-03-07 An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws Fraser, Gareth J Hulsey, C. Darrin Bloomquist, Ryan F Uyesugi, Kristine Manley, Nancy R Streelman, J. Todd PLoS Biol Research Article Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion years ago. As gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates) evolved, teeth developed on oral jaws and helped to establish the dominance of this lineage on land and in the sea. The advent of oral jaws was facilitated, in part, by absence of hox gene expression in the first, most anterior, pharyngeal arch. Much later in evolutionary time, teleost fishes evolved a novel toothed jaw in the pharynx, the location of the first vertebrate teeth. To examine the evolutionary modularity of dentitions, we asked whether oral and pharyngeal teeth develop using common or independent gene regulatory pathways. First, we showed that tooth number is correlated on oral and pharyngeal jaws across species of cichlid fishes from Lake Malawi (East Africa), suggestive of common regulatory mechanisms for tooth initiation. Surprisingly, we found that cichlid pharyngeal dentitions develop in a region of dense hox gene expression. Thus, regulation of tooth number is conserved, despite distinct developmental environments of oral and pharyngeal jaws; pharyngeal jaws occupy hox-positive, endodermal sites, and oral jaws develop in hox-negative regions with ectodermal cell contributions. Next, we studied the expression of a dental gene network for tooth initiation, most genes of which are similarly deployed across the two disparate jaw sites. This collection of genes includes members of the ectodysplasin pathway, eda and edar, expressed identically during the patterning of oral and pharyngeal teeth. Taken together, these data suggest that pharyngeal teeth of jawless vertebrates utilized an ancient gene network before the origin of oral jaws, oral teeth, and ectodermal appendages. The first vertebrate dentition likely appeared in a hox-positive, endodermal environment and expressed a genetic program including ectodysplasin pathway genes. This ancient regulatory circuit was co-opted and modified for teeth in oral jaws of the first jawed vertebrate, and subsequently deployed as jaws enveloped teeth on novel pharyngeal jaws. Our data highlight an amazing modularity of jaws and teeth as they coevolved during the history of vertebrates. We exploit this diversity to infer a core dental gene network, common to the first tooth and all of its descendants. Public Library of Science 2009-02 2009-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC2637924/ /pubmed/19215146 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000031 Text en © 2009 Fraser et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fraser, Gareth J
Hulsey, C. Darrin
Bloomquist, Ryan F
Uyesugi, Kristine
Manley, Nancy R
Streelman, J. Todd
An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws
title An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws
title_full An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws
title_fullStr An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws
title_full_unstemmed An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws
title_short An Ancient Gene Network Is Co-opted for Teeth on Old and New Jaws
title_sort ancient gene network is co-opted for teeth on old and new jaws
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2637924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19215146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000031
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